Microbial diversity of caves is largely understudied and its possible applications are still unknown. Autochthonous fungi, in particular, may have the potential to biomineralize metals and may be used as promising agents for bioremediation of polluted sites; thus, unearthing the fungal diversity in hypogean ecosystems is nowadays of utmost importance. To start addressing this knowledge gap, the cultivable mycobiota of two neighbouring caves—one natural and one exploited for touristic purposes—were characterised and compared by studying fungi isolated from sediments collected at increasing distances from the entrance. Overall, 250 fungal isolates ascribable to 69 taxa (mainly Ascomycota) were found, a high percentage of which was reported in caves for the first time. The sediments of the touristic cave displayed a richer and more diversified community in comparison with the natural one, possibly due to visitors carrying propagules or organic material. Considering that these environments are still poorly explored, chances to detect new fungal lineages are not negligible.

Cultivable fungal diversity in two karstic caves in Italy: under-investigated habitats as source of putative novel taxa

Poli, A.;Zanellati, A.;Piano, E.;Nicolosi, G.;Isaia, M.;Prigione, V.
;
Varese, G. C.
2024-01-01

Abstract

Microbial diversity of caves is largely understudied and its possible applications are still unknown. Autochthonous fungi, in particular, may have the potential to biomineralize metals and may be used as promising agents for bioremediation of polluted sites; thus, unearthing the fungal diversity in hypogean ecosystems is nowadays of utmost importance. To start addressing this knowledge gap, the cultivable mycobiota of two neighbouring caves—one natural and one exploited for touristic purposes—were characterised and compared by studying fungi isolated from sediments collected at increasing distances from the entrance. Overall, 250 fungal isolates ascribable to 69 taxa (mainly Ascomycota) were found, a high percentage of which was reported in caves for the first time. The sediments of the touristic cave displayed a richer and more diversified community in comparison with the natural one, possibly due to visitors carrying propagules or organic material. Considering that these environments are still poorly explored, chances to detect new fungal lineages are not negligible.
2024
Inglese
Esperti anonimi
14
1
1
15
15
Leotiomycetes, Mycobiota, Phylogeny, Show-cave
no
   ISAIA Marco - MIUR - PRIN 2017 Linea A - SHOWCAVE: a multidisciplinary research project to study, classify and mitigate the environmental impact in tourist caves
   SHOWCAVE
   MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA

   Strengthening the MIRRI Italian Research Infrastructure... -SUS-MIRRI.IT,PNRR MUR M4C2–Investimento 3.1 "Fondo per la realizzazione di un sistema integrato di infrastrutture di ricerca e innovazione" D.D. n. 3264 del 28/12/21, cod. MUR IR0000005
   SUS-MIRRI.IT
   Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca
   VARESE C.
1 – prodotto con file in versione Open Access (allegherò il file al passo 6 - Carica)
262
10
Poli, A.; Zanellati, A.; Piano, E.; Biagioli, F.; Coleine, C.; Nicolosi, G.; Selbmann, L.; Isaia, M.; Prigione, V.; Varese, G. C.
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
open
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1986316
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